9 research outputs found

    An epidemiological study on anemia among institutionalized people with intellectual and/or motor disability with special reference to its frequency, severity and predictors

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    BACKGROUND: To examine the type, frequency, severity, and predictors of anemia and its relationship with co-morbid conditions among institutionalized people with intellectual and/or motor disability. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study at a public facility for people with intellectual and/or motor disability in Ibaraki prefecture, Japan. Health checkup data obtained in 2001 from 477 people with intellectual disability (male: 286, average age 40.6 ± 12.3; female: 191, average age 45.1 ± 11.6) were retrospectively reviewed. RESULTS: The prevalence of anemia among male participants was higher than in female participants for each disability category (intellectual disability, 41.1%, 4.2%; cerebral palsy, 37.5%, 4.8%; Down's syndrome, 15.0%, 0%; severe motor and intellectual disabilities, 61.9%, 16.7%). Most participants with anemia (93.8 – 100%) showed a normocytic normochromic anemia pattern. Multivariate analysis revealed that factors related to an increase in frequency included sex (male), low body mass index (BMI), use of anticonvulsants or major tranquilizers, and a high zinc sulfate turbidity test (ZTT) value. No clinically diagnosed co-morbid condition was found to be related to the presence of anemia. CONCLUSION: A high frequency of mild normocytic normochromic anemia in institutionalized people with intellectual and/or motor disability was observed, particularly among males. Medications and chronic inflammation may increase the risk of anemia

    Serum albumin levels and their correlates among individuals with motor disorders at five institutions in Japan

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    [BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES]The level of serum albumin is an index of nourishment care and management. However, the distribution and correlates of serum albumin levels among individuals with motor disorders have not been reported until now. Therefore, we examined the distribution and correlates of serum albumin levels among individuals with motor disorders. [SUBJECTS/METHODS]A cross-sectional study on 249 individuals with motor disabilities (144 men, mean age: 51.4 years; 105 women, mean age: 51.4 years) was conducted at five institutions in Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan in 2008. The results were compared with data from the National Health and Nutrition Survey. [RESULTS]The mean serum albumin levels were 4.0 ± 0.4 g/dL for men and 3.8 ± 0.5 g/dL for women. Overall, 17 (11.8%) men and 25 (23.8%) women had hypoalbuminemia (serum albumin level ≤ 3.5 g/dL); these proportions were greater than those among healthy Japanese adults (≤ 1%). Low serum albumin level was related with female sex, older age, low calf circumference, low relative daily energy intake, low hemoglobin (Hb), low blood platelet count, low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), low HbA1c, and high C-reactive protein (CRP) levels. The strongest correlates, based on standardized betas, were Hb (0.321), CRP (-0.279), and HDL-C (0.279) levels. [CONCLUSIONS]These results indicate that the prevalence of hypoalbuminemia is higher in individuals with motor disabilities than in healthy individuals and that inflammation is a strong negative correlate of serum albumin levels. Therefore, inflammation should be examined for the assessment of hypoalbuminemia among institutionalized individuals with motor disabilities

    Peribacteroid solution of soybean root nodules partly induces genomic loci for differentiation into bacteroids of free-living <i>Bradyrhizobium japonicum</i> cells

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    <div><p></p><p>In leguminous root nodules, rhizobia differentiate into morphology specific to symbiosis, called bacteroids. As bacteroids are surrounded with peribacteroid membranes filled with peribacteroid solution (PBS), it is considered that PBS contains substances inducing differentiation of rhizobia into bacteroids. In this study, genome-wide expression profiles of <i>Bradyrhizobium japonicum</i> cells cultured in PBS purified from root nodule of soybean (<i>Glycine max</i> L.) were compared with those of bacteroids using macroarray. PBS treatment preferentially induced regions in a large symbiosis island including various symbiosis relevant genes such as <i>nod, fix, nol</i> and <i>noe</i>, in which 75% of regions were commonly induced in bacteroids, while general repressions outside of the symbiosis island seen in bacteroids were not observed in PBS treated cells. The present results suggest that PBS contained some, but not all, substances inducing expression of the genes which are involved in differentiation into bacteroids.</p></div
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